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Meet the People Keeping Your Baby’s Stem Cells Safe at Cord Blood Registry – Video

March 12th, 2012 8:55 am

07-03-2012 16:30 Meet Angel, one of the many people at Cord Blood Registry dedicated to making sure every family gets the highest quality newborn stem cell processing possible. Learn more about Angel at http://www.cordblood.com Cord Blood Registry puts our client families' needs first. Our services, technology, and processing were developed with one thing in mind -- banking on healthy futures. From the moment you decide to entrust your baby's cord blood and tissue stem cells with CBR, our team of dedicated professionals puts your family's needs first. Learn more about CBR and how our collection and processing system saves your family more cells than any other bank: http://www.cordblood.com

Read the rest here:
Meet the People Keeping Your Baby's Stem Cells Safe at Cord Blood Registry - Video

Read More...

China medical tourism Parkinson’s disease stem cells therapy 1 – Video

March 12th, 2012 8:55 am

11-03-2012 03:12

See the rest here:
China medical tourism Parkinson's disease stem cells therapy 1 - Video

Read More...

Progress, no big breakthrough, in hunt for HIV cure

March 12th, 2012 8:53 am

(Reuters) - Scientists, stymied for decades by the complexity of the human immunodeficiency virus, are making progress on several fronts in the search for a cure for HIV infections, a leading medical research conference was told this week in Seattle.

Promising tactics range from flushing hidden HIV from cells to changing out a person's own immune system cells, making them resistant to HIV and then putting them back into the patient's body.

A major stumbling block is the fact that HIV lies low in pools or reservoirs of latent infection that even powerful drugs cannot reach, scientists told the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, one of the world's largest scientific meetings on HIV/AIDS.

"We need to get the virus to come out of the latent state, then rely on the immune system or some other treatment to kill the virus," said Dr. Kevin De Cock, director of the Center for Global Health at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

HIV, which surfaced more than 30 years ago, infects more than 33 million people worldwide. Thanks to prevention measures, tests that detect HIV early and new antiretroviral drugs that can control the virus for decades, infection with the virus that causes AIDS is no longer a death sentence.

Still, questions of cost, side effects, drug resistance and ultimate lifespan, make lifelong use of antiviral drugs a less-than-ideal solution.

The International AIDS Society last year formally added the aim of finding a cure to its HIV strategy of prevention, treatment and care.

Early human trials of vaccines designed to prevent or treat infection with the difficult to target virus have proved disappointing. HIV is a "provirus" that is integrated into the DNA of a host cell, where it can remain latent or eventually reactivate.

"It has proven to be an incredibly formidable challenge to develop a vaccine," said John Coffin, professor of molecular biology at Tufts University in Boston. "In recent years the pendulum is swinging back."

Scientific advances in molecular engineering are allowing researchers to delve more deeply into the mechanism of HIV.

Read more:
Progress, no big breakthrough, in hunt for HIV cure

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A new approach to treating type I diabetes? Gut cells transformed into insulin factories

March 12th, 2012 8:52 am

Public release date: 11-Mar-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Karin Eskenazi ket2116@columbia.edu 212-342-0508 Columbia University Medical Center

NEW YORK, NY -- A study by Columbia researchers suggests that cells in the patient's intestine could be coaxed into making insulin, circumventing the need for a stem cell transplant. Until now, stem cell transplants have been seen by many researchers as the ideal way to replace cells lost in type I diabetes and to free patients from insulin injections.

The researchconducted in micewas published 11 March 2012 in the journal Nature Genetics.

Type I diabetes is an autoimmune disease that destroys insulin-producing cells in the pancreas. The pancreas cannot replace these cells, so once they are lost, people with type I diabetes must inject themselves with insulin to control their blood glucose. Blood glucose that is too high or too low can be life threatening, and patients must monitor their glucose several times a day.

A longstanding goal of type I diabetes research is to replace lost cells with new cells that release insulin into the bloodstream as needed. Though researchers can make insulin-producing cells in the laboratory from embryonic stem cells, such cells are not yet appropriate for transplant because they do not release insulin appropriately in response to glucose levels. If these cells were introduced into a patient, insulin would be secreted when not needed, potentially causing fatal hypoglycemia.

The study, conducted by Chutima Talchai, PhD, and Domenico Accili, MD, professor of medicine at Columbia University Medical Center, shows that certain progenitor cells in the intestine of mice have the surprising ability to make insulin-producing cells. Dr. Talchai is a postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Accili's lab.

The gastrointestinal progenitor cells are normally responsible for producing a wide range of cells, including cells that produce serotonin, gastric inhibitory peptide, and other hormones secreted into the GI tract and bloodstream.

Drs. Talchai and Accili found that when they turned off a gene known to play a role in cell fate decisionsFoxo1the progenitor cells also generated insulin-producing cells. More cells were generated when Foxo1 was turned off early in development, but insulin-producing cells were also generated when the gene was turned off after the mice had reached adulthood.

"Our results show that it could be possible to regrow insulin-producing cells in the GI tracts of our pediatric and adult patients," Dr. Accili says.

Read the original post:
A new approach to treating type I diabetes? Gut cells transformed into insulin factories

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Dublin team creates collagen and stem cell barrier against blindness

March 12th, 2012 8:52 am

The Irish Times - Monday, March 12, 2012

MEDICAL RESEARCH:SOMETIMES research and innovation can transform lives. Work by Prof Fergal OBrien has the potential to do just that, helping to protect clear vision in patients with a particular eye disorder.

Based at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, OBrien heads the tissue engineering research group in the department of anatomy. The focus of the work we do is the use of collagen-based biomaterials for tissue repair in combination with stem-cell therapies, he explains. Collagen is the main component of connective tissue and is the bodys most abundant protein. OBrien is using it as a base material in cartilage repair and also in bone regeneration and in cardiovascular applications.

Because of this expertise, he was approached to develop a way to repair the cornea, the clear window of the eye. The cornea is protected by an essential outer layer of tissue called epithelial cells, and in some conditions this breaks down, something that over time can cause blindness.

The eye produces limbal stem cells to repair damage to the epithelial layer, but if there are not enough as in limbal stem-cell deficiency disorders vision may degrade before repairs can occur.

OBriens team has developed a thin, transparent collagen scaffold and he plans to seed this with limbal stem cells and then use it as a protective cover for the cornea. It will cover the surface of the eye and help regenerate the corneal surface, he says.

Enterprise Ireland funds some of his research, which is near to market, and last month, he received a Technology Innovation Development Award from Science Foundation Ireland.

I want to see these treatments coming into use and improving peoples quality of life, he says.

DICK AHLSTROM, Science Editor

Cool drinks gadget wins

See original here:
Dublin team creates collagen and stem cell barrier against blindness

Read More...

Coriander oil (cilantro) can be used to treat food poisoning and drug-resistant infections

March 11th, 2012 3:57 pm

By Jonathan Benson

Food-borne illness outbreaks and the growing prevalence of antibiotic-resistant "superbugs" are two very serious societal problems for which researchers say they are actively looking for viable solutions. But one such solution found right in nature is coriander oil, which has been found to kill a number of different bacterial strains, as well as aid in digestion and treat the symptoms of food poisoning.

Dr. Fernanda Domingues and her colleagues from the University of Beira Interior in Portugal tested the effects of coriander oil, an essential oil extracted from the seeds of the coriander plant, also known as cilantro, on twelve different bacterial strains, including Escherichia coli (E. coli), Salmonella enterica, and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), the infamous hospital superbug. Read more...

AyurGold for Healthy Blood

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http://feeds.feedburner.com/integratedmedicine

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Predicting the Success of the Late-Stage Cell-Based Cancer Immunotherapy Pipeline?

March 11th, 2012 3:57 pm

Tweet 


Adam
Feuerstein
(phama and biotech writer with TheStreet.com) has designed his own rule. 

For those who know or follow Adam, this will come as no surprise.  He is
neither short of rules nor opinion and is never shy in his vivid expression of
either.  But this rule is more than a simple expression of informed
opinion. It was born of hard data analysis and has yet to be broken.  In
Adam’s own words, this is how he and his colleague (Mark J. Ratain) came to the
rule they coined the Feuerstein-Ratain Rule:
[We] analyzed the outcomes of
59 phase III clinical trials of cancer drugs going back 10 years, stratified by
the market value of the companies four months prior to trial results being
announced. What we found was a remarkable difference between the market values of companies that had positive and negative
announcements
.  (the list of companies/products used can be found here
)
Specifically, the median market capitalization was approximately
80-fold greater for the companies with positive trials vs. companies with
negative trials. There were no positive trials among the 21 micro-cap companies
(companies with less than $300 million market capitalization) whereas 21 of 27
studies reported by the larger companies analyzed (greater than $1 billion
capitalization) were positive.
Here’s the rule in a nutshell: 
There is a 100% failure rate for phase III cancer
drug trials conducted by micro-cap cancer drug developers
.
The
editorial, entitled “Oncology Micro-Cap Stocks: Caveat Emptor!”, can be
found in Journal of the National Cancer
Institute
 
(JNCI) at http://jnci.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2011/09/26/jnci.djr375.full.
They identified
drugs that were undergoing evaluation in phase III trials or for regulatory approval
by the US FDA between January 2000 and January 2009. 
They calculated the
company value based on the market value of primary drug sponsor roughly
three months prior to the release of the data.  They concluded that
whether or not a company had pharma in place was not determinative of a drug’s
success but rather that partnerships or acquisitions by Big Pharma can play a
role in determining a drug’s success only in that these deals may increase the
market value of the primary drug sponsor.  That value was the
determinative factor.
This
is Adam’s summary of the analysis they did that led to the “Feuerstein-Ratain Rule”.  
Below
are the important snippets from the analysis behind the rule:
The "Feuerstein-Ratain
rule" is derived from an analysis of 59 phase III clinical trials of
cancer drugs conducted over the past 10 years. We actually had no say
whatsoever in the selection of cancer drugs used in the analysis. The list was
put together by health economist Allan Detsky of Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital
and his co-authors as part of their paper published in the Journal of the National Cancer
Institute
 suggesting that
doctors entrusted with conducting late-stage cancer drug clinical trials are
using advanced knowledge of the results of these pivotal studies to engage in
illegal insider trading.
Ratain and I used the same list of 59 cancer drug clinical trials,
re-analyzed by market value of the drug sponsors, to debunk Detsky's
insider-trading theory. That's how the "Feuerstein-Ratain rule" came
about, and we published our conclusions in the JNCI alongside Detsky's paper.
To restate our findings:  No positive trials among the
21 micro-cap companies
(companies with less than $300 million market
capitalization) whereas 21 of 27 studies reported by the larger companies analyzed
(greater than $1 billion capitalization) were positive
There were 21 companies on the
list with market values of $300 million or less, with a 0% success rate in
phase III cancer drug clinical trials.
The list also contained 11 companies with market caps between
$300 million and $1 billion. The clinical trial success rate for this mid-tier
or second strata group was 18%. (Two positive clinical trials out of 11.)
Lastly, there were 21 of 27 studies reported by the larger
companies analyzed (greater than $1 billion capitalization) that were positive,
or a 78% success rate.
So
what interesting for us in cell therapy?
It
is interesting to note that the Feuerstein-Ratain Rule is
limited to oncology drugs and all the companies behind them were public. 
Adam has not – nor has anyone else to the best of my knowledge – looked at how
the rule may or may not translate outside of oncology.

Of
the cell therapy companies to have received market approval in US or EU in the
past 10 years, one was public (DNDN) and one was still private (TIG) and went
public shortly therafter in the same year. TiGenix was a private company and is
not in oncology so the analysis arguably does not apply.  However,
Dendreon’s Provenge is an oncology ‘drug’.  Dendreon had a market cap of
about $430M in the 4 months before its ph III data was announced and as such
would have fallen in the 18% likelihood of success category.  That sounds
about right.

I thought it might be interesting to do our own look at what the Rule might say about the pipeline of late-stage cell-based oncology trials.  Following
is a list of cell therapy companies currently in ph III or II/III for oncology:

2010 Onco CT Immunotherapies (late-stage)
* Trial not expected to complete until Q1
2014 so a lot could happen to the market cap in 2012/13.  It also could be
argued that this is not an oncology treatment as per original data set but a
treatment of the side  effects of the primary cancer treatment.
** Trial not expected to complete until Q1
2014 so a lot could happen to the market cap in 2012/13.
*** It could be argued that this is not an
oncology treatment as per original data set but 
a treatment of the side effects of the primary cancer treatment.
+ It could be argued this is not a cell
therapy though we would argue it is.  Others might argue that as a phase II/III
trial with only 60 patients this may not be powered to be a pivotal oncology trial.
^ Trial currently in “suspension” so this
date may be pushed out or trial terminated. It also could be argued that this
is not an oncology treatment as per original data set but a treatment of
the effects of the primary cancer treatment.  Others might argue that as a phase II/III trial with
only 70 patients this may not be powered to be a pivotal oncology trial.
Conclusion:  At the moment it looks like both NovaRx and ERYtech will go to their phase III data completion (June and October 2012 respectively) as private companies.  To qualify under the rule, Cell Medica would have to go public within the year and/or Kiadis would have to go public within the next 25 months. 

The only
companies with cell-based oncology products currently in late-stage trials to
which the Rule would apply are Molmed’s HSV-TK and Newlink Genetics’ HyperAcute
Pancreas.  

Assuming both MolMed and NewLink's trials progress as planned, we won’t know what
they look like under the rule until around Sept 2013 at which time we can assess their
market cap against the Rule.  At the moment, it’s looking pretty bleak for
both of them according to the Rule though at least the NLNK price has been
going in the right direction of late.  

Certainly one would expect trading
volume to dramatically increase on both these as their trial completion dates
near.  It remains to be seen how this will impact price but they would
have to  dramatically increase in market cap (double or triple) to succeed
as the Rule predicts. 

Naturally, this is just one way of looking at the world and, of course, this rule - as with all rules - is meant to be broken.
  

http://www.celltherapyblog.com hosted by http://www.celltherapygroup.com

Source:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/CellTherapyBlog

Read More...

Can “Clinical Data Integration on the Cloud” be a reality?

March 11th, 2012 3:57 pm

 

The story I am about to tell is almost 8 years old. I was managing software services delivery for a global pharmaceutical company from India. This was a very strategic account and the breadth of services covered diverse systems and geographies. It is very common that staff from the customer organization visit our delivery centers (offsite locations) to perform process audits, governance reviews and to meet people in their extended organizations.

During one such visit a senior executive noticed that two of my colleagues, sitting next to each other, supported their system (two different implementations of the same software) across two different geographies. They happened to have the name of the systems they support, pinned to a board at their desks. The executive wanted us to take a picture of the two cubicles and email to him. We were quite surprised at the request. Before moving on to speak to other people he asked a couple of questions and realized the guys were sharing each other’s experiences and leveraging the lessons learnt from one deployment for the other geography.  It turned out that this does not happen in their organization, in fact their internal teams hardly communicate as they are part of different business units and geographies

Read full article on at inPharmatics

Source:
http://microarray.wordpress.com/feed/

Read More...

International Stem Cell Corporation to Present at the Roth Conference on March 14, 2012

March 11th, 2012 3:57 pm
International Stem Cell Corporation (OTCBB:ISCO) today announced that Co-Chairman Kenneth Aldrich and President and Chief Operating Officer Kurt May will be presenting at the 24th Annual Roth Conference on Wednesday, March 14, 2012 at 1:00 p.m. Pacific time. The conference is being held March 11-14 at the Ritz Carlton Hotel in Dana Point, California.
About International Stem Cell Corporation
International Stem Cell Corporation is focused on the therapeutic applications of human parthenogenetic stem cells (hpSCs) and the development and commercialization of cell-based research and cosmetic products. ISCO's core technology, parthenogenesis, results in the creation of pluripotent human stem cells from unfertilized oocytes (eggs). hpSCs avoid ethical issues associated with the use or destruction of viable human embryos. ISCO scientists have created the first parthenogenic, homozygous stem cell line that can be a source of therapeutic cells for hundreds of millions of individuals of differing genders, ages and racial background with minimal immune rejection after transplantation. hpSCs offer the potential to create the first true stem cell bank, UniStemCell™. ISCO also produces and markets specialized cells and growth media for therapeutic research worldwide through its subsidiary Lifeline Cell Technology, and cell-based skin care products through its subsidiary Lifeline Skin Care. More information is available at http://www.internationalstemcell.com.
To subscribe to receive ongoing corporate communications, please click on the following link: http://www.b2i.us/irpass.asp?BzID=1468&to=ea&s=0.
International Stem Cell Corporation
Kenneth C. Aldrich, Co-Chairman
760-940-6383
kaldrich@intlstemcell.com

Source:
http://intlstemcell.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rss

Read More...

Coriander oil (cilantro) can be used to treat food poisoning and drug-resistant infections

March 11th, 2012 3:54 pm

By Jonathan Benson

Food-borne illness outbreaks and the growing prevalence of antibiotic-resistant "superbugs" are two very serious societal problems for which researchers say they are actively looking for viable solutions. But one such solution found right in nature is coriander oil, which has been found to kill a number of different bacterial strains, as well as aid in digestion and treat the symptoms of food poisoning.

Dr. Fernanda Domingues and her colleagues from the University of Beira Interior in Portugal tested the effects of coriander oil, an essential oil extracted from the seeds of the coriander plant, also known as cilantro, on twelve different bacterial strains, including Escherichia coli (E. coli), Salmonella enterica, and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), the infamous hospital superbug. Read more...

AyurGold for Healthy Blood

Source:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/integratedmedicine

Read More...

Predicting the Success of the Late-Stage Cell-Based Cancer Immunotherapy Pipeline?

March 11th, 2012 3:54 pm

Tweet 


Adam
Feuerstein
(phama and biotech writer with TheStreet.com) has designed his own rule. 

For those who know or follow Adam, this will come as no surprise.  He is
neither short of rules nor opinion and is never shy in his vivid expression of
either.  But this rule is more than a simple expression of informed
opinion. It was born of hard data analysis and has yet to be broken.  In
Adam’s own words, this is how he and his colleague (Mark J. Ratain) came to the
rule they coined the Feuerstein-Ratain Rule:
[We] analyzed the outcomes of
59 phase III clinical trials of cancer drugs going back 10 years, stratified by
the market value of the companies four months prior to trial results being
announced. What we found was a remarkable difference between the market values of companies that had positive and negative
announcements
.  (the list of companies/products used can be found here
)
Specifically, the median market capitalization was approximately
80-fold greater for the companies with positive trials vs. companies with
negative trials. There were no positive trials among the 21 micro-cap companies
(companies with less than $300 million market capitalization) whereas 21 of 27
studies reported by the larger companies analyzed (greater than $1 billion
capitalization) were positive.
Here’s the rule in a nutshell: 
There is a 100% failure rate for phase III cancer
drug trials conducted by micro-cap cancer drug developers
.
The
editorial, entitled “Oncology Micro-Cap Stocks: Caveat Emptor!”, can be
found in Journal of the National Cancer
Institute
 
(JNCI) at http://jnci.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2011/09/26/jnci.djr375.full.
They identified
drugs that were undergoing evaluation in phase III trials or for regulatory approval
by the US FDA between January 2000 and January 2009. 
They calculated the
company value based on the market value of primary drug sponsor roughly
three months prior to the release of the data.  They concluded that
whether or not a company had pharma in place was not determinative of a drug’s
success but rather that partnerships or acquisitions by Big Pharma can play a
role in determining a drug’s success only in that these deals may increase the
market value of the primary drug sponsor.  That value was the
determinative factor.
This
is Adam’s summary of the analysis they did that led to the “Feuerstein-Ratain Rule”.  
Below
are the important snippets from the analysis behind the rule:
The "Feuerstein-Ratain
rule" is derived from an analysis of 59 phase III clinical trials of
cancer drugs conducted over the past 10 years. We actually had no say
whatsoever in the selection of cancer drugs used in the analysis. The list was
put together by health economist Allan Detsky of Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital
and his co-authors as part of their paper published in the Journal of the National Cancer
Institute
 suggesting that
doctors entrusted with conducting late-stage cancer drug clinical trials are
using advanced knowledge of the results of these pivotal studies to engage in
illegal insider trading.
Ratain and I used the same list of 59 cancer drug clinical trials,
re-analyzed by market value of the drug sponsors, to debunk Detsky's
insider-trading theory. That's how the "Feuerstein-Ratain rule" came
about, and we published our conclusions in the JNCI alongside Detsky's paper.
To restate our findings:  No positive trials among the
21 micro-cap companies
(companies with less than $300 million market
capitalization) whereas 21 of 27 studies reported by the larger companies analyzed
(greater than $1 billion capitalization) were positive
There were 21 companies on the
list with market values of $300 million or less, with a 0% success rate in
phase III cancer drug clinical trials.
The list also contained 11 companies with market caps between
$300 million and $1 billion. The clinical trial success rate for this mid-tier
or second strata group was 18%. (Two positive clinical trials out of 11.)
Lastly, there were 21 of 27 studies reported by the larger
companies analyzed (greater than $1 billion capitalization) that were positive,
or a 78% success rate.
So
what interesting for us in cell therapy?
It
is interesting to note that the Feuerstein-Ratain Rule is
limited to oncology drugs and all the companies behind them were public. 
Adam has not – nor has anyone else to the best of my knowledge – looked at how
the rule may or may not translate outside of oncology.

Of
the cell therapy companies to have received market approval in US or EU in the
past 10 years, one was public (DNDN) and one was still private (TIG) and went
public shortly therafter in the same year. TiGenix was a private company and is
not in oncology so the analysis arguably does not apply.  However,
Dendreon’s Provenge is an oncology ‘drug’.  Dendreon had a market cap of
about $430M in the 4 months before its ph III data was announced and as such
would have fallen in the 18% likelihood of success category.  That sounds
about right.

I thought it might be interesting to do our own look at what the Rule might say about the pipeline of late-stage cell-based oncology trials.  Following
is a list of cell therapy companies currently in ph III or II/III for oncology:

2010 Onco CT Immunotherapies (late-stage)
* Trial not expected to complete until Q1
2014 so a lot could happen to the market cap in 2012/13.  It also could be
argued that this is not an oncology treatment as per original data set but a
treatment of the side  effects of the primary cancer treatment.
** Trial not expected to complete until Q1
2014 so a lot could happen to the market cap in 2012/13.
*** It could be argued that this is not an
oncology treatment as per original data set but 
a treatment of the side effects of the primary cancer treatment.
+ It could be argued this is not a cell
therapy though we would argue it is.  Others might argue that as a phase II/III
trial with only 60 patients this may not be powered to be a pivotal oncology trial.
^ Trial currently in “suspension” so this
date may be pushed out or trial terminated. It also could be argued that this
is not an oncology treatment as per original data set but a treatment of
the effects of the primary cancer treatment.  Others might argue that as a phase II/III trial with
only 70 patients this may not be powered to be a pivotal oncology trial.
Conclusion:  At the moment it looks like both NovaRx and ERYtech will go to their phase III data completion (June and October 2012 respectively) as private companies.  To qualify under the rule, Cell Medica would have to go public within the year and/or Kiadis would have to go public within the next 25 months. 

The only
companies with cell-based oncology products currently in late-stage trials to
which the Rule would apply are Molmed’s HSV-TK and Newlink Genetics’ HyperAcute
Pancreas.  

Assuming both MolMed and NewLink's trials progress as planned, we won’t know what
they look like under the rule until around Sept 2013 at which time we can assess their
market cap against the Rule.  At the moment, it’s looking pretty bleak for
both of them according to the Rule though at least the NLNK price has been
going in the right direction of late.  

Certainly one would expect trading
volume to dramatically increase on both these as their trial completion dates
near.  It remains to be seen how this will impact price but they would
have to  dramatically increase in market cap (double or triple) to succeed
as the Rule predicts. 

Naturally, this is just one way of looking at the world and, of course, this rule - as with all rules - is meant to be broken.
  

http://www.celltherapyblog.com hosted by http://www.celltherapygroup.com

Source:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/CellTherapyBlog

Read More...

Can “Clinical Data Integration on the Cloud” be a reality?

March 11th, 2012 3:54 pm

 

The story I am about to tell is almost 8 years old. I was managing software services delivery for a global pharmaceutical company from India. This was a very strategic account and the breadth of services covered diverse systems and geographies. It is very common that staff from the customer organization visit our delivery centers (offsite locations) to perform process audits, governance reviews and to meet people in their extended organizations.

During one such visit a senior executive noticed that two of my colleagues, sitting next to each other, supported their system (two different implementations of the same software) across two different geographies. They happened to have the name of the systems they support, pinned to a board at their desks. The executive wanted us to take a picture of the two cubicles and email to him. We were quite surprised at the request. Before moving on to speak to other people he asked a couple of questions and realized the guys were sharing each other’s experiences and leveraging the lessons learnt from one deployment for the other geography.  It turned out that this does not happen in their organization, in fact their internal teams hardly communicate as they are part of different business units and geographies

Read full article on at inPharmatics

Source:
http://microarray.wordpress.com/feed/

Read More...

International Stem Cell Corporation to Present at the Roth Conference on March 14, 2012

March 11th, 2012 3:54 pm
International Stem Cell Corporation (OTCBB:ISCO) today announced that Co-Chairman Kenneth Aldrich and President and Chief Operating Officer Kurt May will be presenting at the 24th Annual Roth Conference on Wednesday, March 14, 2012 at 1:00 p.m. Pacific time. The conference is being held March 11-14 at the Ritz Carlton Hotel in Dana Point, California.
About International Stem Cell Corporation
International Stem Cell Corporation is focused on the therapeutic applications of human parthenogenetic stem cells (hpSCs) and the development and commercialization of cell-based research and cosmetic products. ISCO's core technology, parthenogenesis, results in the creation of pluripotent human stem cells from unfertilized oocytes (eggs). hpSCs avoid ethical issues associated with the use or destruction of viable human embryos. ISCO scientists have created the first parthenogenic, homozygous stem cell line that can be a source of therapeutic cells for hundreds of millions of individuals of differing genders, ages and racial background with minimal immune rejection after transplantation. hpSCs offer the potential to create the first true stem cell bank, UniStemCell™. ISCO also produces and markets specialized cells and growth media for therapeutic research worldwide through its subsidiary Lifeline Cell Technology, and cell-based skin care products through its subsidiary Lifeline Skin Care. More information is available at http://www.internationalstemcell.com.
To subscribe to receive ongoing corporate communications, please click on the following link: http://www.b2i.us/irpass.asp?BzID=1468&to=ea&s=0.
International Stem Cell Corporation
Kenneth C. Aldrich, Co-Chairman
760-940-6383
kaldrich@intlstemcell.com

Source:
http://intlstemcell.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rss

Read More...

Easy stem cell culturing on Laminin-521 – Video

March 10th, 2012 6:26 am

07-03-2012 09:46 Culturing human embryonic stem (ES) cells in a controlled, biorelevant and repeatable manner is known to be difficult. Here we describe a method from BioLamina how the problem is solved using human recombinant laminin-521. Culturing ES cells has never been this easy! More information how to make your cell culturing easy, visit biolamina.com.

More:
Easy stem cell culturing on Laminin-521 - Video

Read More...

The Prostate Cancer Foundation Expands Global Reach, Adds First Two PCF Young Investigators in China

March 10th, 2012 6:23 am

BEIJING--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The Prostate Cancer Foundation today announced its first two Young Investigators in China to launch its initiative to identify, fund and promote innovative research projects within China. As with all of its funded research across the globe, the PCF China program carries the ultimate goal of ending death and suffering from prostate cancer.

PCFs first two Young Investigators in China will be honored at a special awards dinner this evening following PCF Chinas First Annual Prostate Cancer Symposium being held today at Peking Universitys Wu Jieping Urology Center, 9:0015:00. The awards ceremony will be held at the Four Points Hotel by Sheraton, Tower 1, 25 Yuanda Road, Haidian District, Beijing, 18:00-21:00.

The 2012 PCF China Young Investigator Award recipients are sponsored anonymously by a long-time PCF donor and are:

Shancheng Ren, MD, PhD Shanghai Changhai Hospital Mentor: Yinghao Sun, MD, PhD

Gene fusions are the erroneous juxtaposition of two genes that do not normally lie next to each other on the genome. As a result of this abnormal placement of two genes, their expression is altered and this may lead to the development and progression of cancer. The TMPRSS2-ERG gene fusions are a hallmark of prostate cancer (PCa), found in ~50% of Caucasian patients. Recent studies have shown that these TMPRSS2-ERG gene fusions occur at a much lower frequency of ~15-20% in prostate cancer patients in China. The underlying genetic heterogeneity/differences among different ethnic populations may explain this observation.

Dr. Shancheng Ren has identified a novel gene fusion in prostate cancer patients in China that results in the juxtaposition of the SDK1 and the AMACR genes. Dr. Ren proposes to study the relative prevalence and clinical significance of this SDK1-AMACR gene fusion in Chinese PCa patients. Dr. Ren also proposes to investigate the SDK1-AMACR gene fusion as a novel, non-invasive marker for the detection of prostate cancer in Chinese patients.

Dr. Ren and team recently published a paper in Cell Research, describing the role of specific gene fusions in Chinese patients. Read the published paper.

Yuxi Zhang, MD, PhD The First Hospital of China Medical University Mentor: Chuize Kong, MD, PhD

Male hormones (androgens) fuel prostate cancer progression and the first line of treatment is Androgen Deprivation Therapy (ADT). Unfortunately, most prostate cancer patients ultimately become resistant to ADT. This stage of prostate cancer is termed castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) and heralds metastasis and an increased risk for death. Researchers recently identified prostate cancer-specific stem cells (PrCSC) that are proposed to play a major role in the development of treatment resistance and progression of prostate cancer. Studies of PrCSCs have shown that these cells are capable of self-renewal, possess enhanced tumor-initiating capabilities, do not rely on androgens for growth and survival and are therefore more resistant to treatment than other cancerous cells. In a previous study, Dr. Zhang has identified a sub-population of PrCSCs that increase in numbers upon treatment with ADT. He observed that this specific sub-population of stem cells decreased when the castration-resistant tumors were treated with androgens and a different PrCSC subset became more prominent in the tumors.

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The Prostate Cancer Foundation Expands Global Reach, Adds First Two PCF Young Investigators in China

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Stem Cell Therapy for Pets? It’s Science-FACT at Val-U-Vet in Florida – Video

March 10th, 2012 6:22 am

05-03-2012 10:46 Compilation video of before/after cases and some media coverage on Stem Cell Therapy at Val-U-Vet. For more information go to PetsLoveStemCells.com

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Stem Cell Therapy for Pets? It's Science-FACT at Val-U-Vet in Florida - Video

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Dr. Bradley Briggs- Stem Cell – Video

March 9th, 2012 5:14 pm

07-03-2012 13:13 The notion of preserving your own stem cells has been gaining some popularity and researches have discovered a new way of preserving more off your cells and thats threw your teeth. Dr. Bradley Briggs from Briggs family & cosmetic dentistry discusses the process and how we can preserve stem cells.

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Stem cells therapy–Muscular Dystophy–China Medical Tourism – Video

March 9th, 2012 5:14 pm

07-03-2012 02:56 Many of our patients travel to Guangzhou from all over the world for medical treatment and tourism. China medical tourism can help with becoming a patient, travel arrangements and language assistance. If you want to know more about our services, please browse the web:htttp://www.medicaltourism.hk/ or mail to us: giels-x@medicaltourism.hk firstcare-china@hotmail.com USA, 33 years old Muscular Dystrophy (Neuromuscular disorder of unknown etiology) Condition Before Treatment ? Rahman's parent's noticed that he was having trouble keeping up with other children and was starting to miss developmental milestones when he was about 4 years old. After a muscle biopsy they determined that he had a neuromuscular disorder that is consistent with muscular dystrophy, although his doctors were never able to determine the exact cause of the condition. The progression of the illness was slow and Rahman was able to have a normal childhood, though his muscle mass continued to slowly atrophy. It has only been in the past 4 to 5 years that the progression of the disease has accelerated and Rahman has seen an impact in his quality of life. Because of this he began to look into new treatment options including stem cells. As a PhD law student, he took his research seriously and explored all the different alternatives. He explains, "I looked at Germany, Mexico, India and China. Weighing the cost and benefits, such as cost and safety. A whole litany of things. In China they use traditional medicine ...

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New Industry Partnership to Strengthen Regenerative Medicine Industry in Canada

March 9th, 2012 5:13 pm

TORONTO, ONTARIO--(Marketwire -03/09/12)- The newest player in the regenerative medicine (RM) field in Canada is taking a collaborative approach to commercializing stem cell and biomaterials products. The Centre for Commercialization of Regenerative Medicine (CCRM) has created an industry consortium that is working together to address real-life bottlenecks in their RM product pipelines.

CCRM's scientific leadership is recognized by the global RM community as being world-leading. According to Michael May, CEO of CCRM, partnering with industry completes the puzzle. "By working with industry, CCRM captures business expertise that informs product development and commercialization. We already had access to some of the best scientific minds in the field and now we have access to seasoned industry experts. This is key to our success and will accelerate product development."

The members of the industry consortium represent the key sectors of the RM industry: therapeutics, devices, reagents, and cells as tools. CCRM has built three core development platforms: reprogramming, cell manufacturing, and biomaterials and tissue mimetics. The intellectual property and infrastructure of CCRM's six research institution partners and support from 20 leading RM companies will enhance Canada's already strong leadership role in the RM field.

"CCRM is uniquely positioned to meet the needs of industry and academia," explains Greg Bonfiglio, Chair of CCRM's Board of Directors. "CCRM boasts scientific expertise and state-of-the-art resources in its development lab and this combination will benefit the regenerative medicine community that can capitalize on our ability to complete projects quickly and cost competitively."

The industry consortium members are as follows:

About the Centre for Commercialization of Regenerative Medicine (CCRM)

CCRM, a Canadian not-for-profit organization funded by the Government of Canada's Networks of Centres of Excellence program and six academic partners, supports the development of technologies that accelerate the commercialization of stem cell- and biomaterials-based technologies and therapies. A network of academics, industry and entrepreneurs, CCRM aims to translate scientific discoveries into marketable products for patients. CCRM launched in Toronto's Discovery District on June 14, 2011.

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New Industry Partnership to Strengthen Regenerative Medicine Industry in Canada

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Bite-Sized Biochemistry #53 – Immune System

March 9th, 2012 5:11 pm

03-08-2011 18:15 Lecture by Kevin Ahern of Oregon State University discussing Biochemistry Basics in BB 451. See the full course at oregonstate.edu This course can be taken for credit (wherever you live) via OSU's ecampus. For details, see ecampus.oregonstate.edu Download Metabolic Melodies at http://www.davincipress.com Related courses include BB 350 - oregonstate.edu BB 450 - oregonstate.edu BB 100 - oregonstate.edu Immune System This information is provided for all of you who love learning. 1. The immune system contains the innate immunity system and the adaptive immunity system. 2. The innate system uses a Toll-like receptor that binds to the PAMP lipopolysaccharide structure on the surface of Gram negative bacteria. 3. The adaptive immune system system contains two major groups of lymphocytes (immune system cells), B cells and T cells. B cells are involved in the production of antibodies and T cells are involved in both cellular killing, as well as stimulation of the B cells. 4. Immunoglobulin G (IgG) is one of five major antibody classes made by the B lymphocytes of the humoral immune system (cellular immune system described below). IgG is the most abundant antibody in the blood serum. Others include IgA (in mucus), IgM (early responder), IgD (function uncertain), and IgE (parasite protection). 5. The structure of antibodies has several common features. First, they are composed of two sets of Heavy (H) and light (L) chains arranged in a Y shape. Both the H and L chains have constant and ...

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Bite-Sized Biochemistry #53 - Immune System

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